E.I. Du Pont De Nemours and Company v. Robert Earl Roye and Diane Roye

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2014
Docket14-12-00740-CV
StatusPublished

This text of E.I. Du Pont De Nemours and Company v. Robert Earl Roye and Diane Roye (E.I. Du Pont De Nemours and Company v. Robert Earl Roye and Diane Roye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E.I. Du Pont De Nemours and Company v. Robert Earl Roye and Diane Roye, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Reversed and Rendered and Majority and Dissenting Opinions filed August 12, 2014.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-12-00740-CV

E. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS AND COMPANY, Appellant V.

ROBERT EARL ROYE AND DIANE ROYE, Appellees

On Appeal from the 165th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2009-80504

MAJORITY OPINION

Appellee Robert Earl Roye was burned seriously when he fell into a pool of hot water at a chemical plant owned by appellant E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. Roye sued DuPont, asserting both ordinary negligence and premises liability causes of action. The trial court submitted each cause of action to the jury in separate questions, and the jury found in favor of Roye on both. Based on the jury’s findings, the trial court signed a final judgment awarding Roye the damages found by the jury less settlement credits. DuPont appeals from that judgment.

Although DuPont raises multiple issues on appeal, we need only address the first and third because they are dispositive. In its first issue, DuPont contends the trial court erred when it submitted Roye’s ordinary negligence cause of action to the jury because Roye was limited to a premises liability cause of action. In its third issue, DuPont contends that even assuming Roye was an invitee of DuPont at the time he was injured, Roye did not establish that DuPont owed Roye any duty regarding the condition of the premises that caused his injuries. Because we agree with DuPont on both its first and third issues, we reverse and render a take-nothing judgment.

BACKGROUND

DuPont owns a chemical plant with multiple manufacturing units in LaPorte, Texas. Prior to 1999, DuPont owned and operated the entire facility, including a formaldehyde production unit and a tetrahydrofuran (THF) production unit. Formaldehyde is used in the manufacture of THF. Steam is a key component used in the production of the chemicals manufactured at DuPont’s plant, as well as a by-product of the manufacture of formaldehyde. Because steam is used throughout the facility, there is a complex system of steam pipelines running through the DuPont plant. Roye was burned by hot condensate that had collected in a pool underneath one of the pipelines.

A. DBW builds a steam pipeline for DuPont’s plant.

In 1999, DuPont contracted with D. B. Western, Inc.—Texas (DBW) to supply formaldehyde and steam to DuPont’s plant. As a result of this agreement, DBW built a formaldehyde manufacturing plant on land purchased from DuPont that was adjacent to but outside the fence surrounding DuPont’s chemical plant.

2 DBW also agreed to design and construct a pipeline system to transport the formaldehyde and steam to the DuPont plant. The pipeline system consists of a pipeline support rack elevated twenty-six feet above the ground that carries separate pipelines for formaldehyde and steam. DuPont agreed it would be responsible for routine visual inspection and maintenance of the portion of the pipeline system located within its facility. Once construction was complete, this responsibility was assigned to DuPont operators working in the THF unit. Roye was one of those DuPont operators.

DuPont had final authority over the design of the pipeline system on its premises, and it also served as the construction manager for the project. As steam travels along the pipeline, some of the steam condenses into liquid. To remove this condensate from the pipeline, six steam traps were built into the part of the pipeline traversing DuPont’s property. Steam traps, like all other parts of the units in a chemical plant, require regular maintenance because they wear out and can also malfunction.1 As a result, DuPont had operators inspect the equipment in their areas of responsibility during every shift. In addition, DuPont hired an outside company, Spirex Sarco, to survey all of the steam traps within the DuPont facility regularly. These surveys continued after DuPont sold the THF unit to Invista, S.a.r.l. in 2004. Finally, every employee working inside the DuPont facility, whether an employee of DuPont or Invista, was charged with the responsibility to report any malfunctioning equipment they observed.

DBW asked DuPont to provide a specification for disposing of the condensate from the six steam traps. In response to this request, DuPont sent DBW “Specification P6D Condensate Disposal French Drain Method.” P6D calls

1 Van Mayberry, a DuPont mechanic at the LaPorte facility, testified that steam traps can fail and then start working properly again. Mayberry described steam traps as unpredictable.

3 for the installation of a French drain—consisting of a clay or concrete pipe two feet in diameter that is buried vertically in the ground and filled with crushed stone or gravel—beneath a steam trap.2 When the steam trap suspended from the pipeline discharges hot condensate, the French drain catches it and gives it time to cool to a safe temperature before releasing it into a storm sewer or drainage ditch. The design of the DBW steam pipeline, as approved by DuPont, called for the installation of French drains under all six steam traps on DuPont’s property.

Although the design called for the installation of French drains under all six steam traps, they were only installed under two. The four remaining steam traps discharged the condensate directly onto the ground. Gerald Hirst, DuPont’s corporate representative during trial, testified that discharging hot condensate onto the ground could be a safe alternative “when all parties agree that it’s a safe location that people are not accessing on a regular basis.” According to Hirst, DuPont’s on-site construction supervisors John Ponder and Oscar Gonzalez made the decision that it was safe to not install four of the French drains.3 Both Ponder and Gonzalez testified at trial, and each denied making the decision to not install these French drains. Gonzalez testified that the decision to not install the drains was made by the DuPont design review team during a construction status meeting. Ponder testified that the steam traps where the French drains were not installed were located in “open territory within the plant site.”

2 According to Specification P6D, French drains are not the preferred method for disposing of hot condensate, which is a valuable commodity. P6D provides: “where conditions make it difficult to dispose of hot condensate by preferred methods, a French drain, constructed in accordance with this standard may be used.” 3 John Ponder was a DuPont employee at the time the DBW pipeline was constructed. Oscar Gonzalez was a Kellogg, Brown & Root employee serving as a field construction coordinator for projects at DuPont’s facility. Neither was an engineer.

4 The DBW steam pipeline is part of a complex steam distribution system at the DuPont facility. Steam is generated by producers such as DBW and Co-Gen, an electricity generator. The steam producers send the steam through metered pipelines to the DuPont steam header. From the steam header, the steam is transported to the different units located inside the DuPont facility, including the Invista THF unit, through additional pipelines. Ponder explained that while the DBW steam pipeline could ordinarily be shut down without also requiring DuPont to shut down its operations, the system requires that a balance be maintained between the supply of steam entering the system and the amount of steam exiting the system.

B. Invista buys part of the plant, hires Roye, and contracts to inspect the pipeline. In 2004, DuPont sold the THF unit to Invista. The sale did not include the land; instead, DuPont and Invista entered into a long-term ground lease. Once DuPont sold the THF unit, the DuPont facility became a shared industrial complex located within a single fence line.

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E.I. Du Pont De Nemours and Company v. Robert Earl Roye and Diane Roye, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ei-du-pont-de-nemours-and-company-v-robert-earl-ro-texapp-2014.